Are the Red Wings Primed for a Fall From Grace?

“Now that (fill in the blank) has retired, we’ll likely see the Red Wings return to the pack”.

I think I first heard that after the Russian Five gradually left the Red Wings. Then again when Scotty Bowman retired and they lost players like Dominic Hasek, Brendan Shanahan and so on. Yet again when Yzerman retired. And the same things were being said this past summer when Lidstrom retired and they weren’t able to sign Ryan Suter.

To my mind, Niklas Lidstrom is probably one of the top five defensemen to ever play the game. That the Red Wings will have some challenges ahead of them in replacing his skill set and time on ice is an understatement. However, they have survived and evolved to meet every obstacle they have faced over the last two decades.

So then, it appears that the Red Wings are invincible and will remain a cup challenger until the End of Days (or Dec 21st 2012). Agreed?

Perhaps we should take a look at the Red Wings and see what sort of position the team is really in.

Upper (Stuffed) Crust

Photo: Mrmiscellaneous/Wikimedia/CC BY 2.5

Pizza magnate Mike Ilitch bought the Red Wings in 1982 for $8 million. Prior to that they had made the playoffs only twice in 17 seasons. Until 1990 it would be an understatement to call the Red Wings a disappointing team although they did show a general trend of improvement (the 1985-86 40-point season aside) once Ilitch became involved. Since 1990 the team has generally maintained a high level of performance. Much of this was due to Ilitch’s brand of management and the enormous financial resources he could bring to the organization. Detroit was consistently able to outspend most other organizations on free agency and in retaining their top-end talent. This, in addition to their strong drafting and developing record (more on that later), meant that prior to the lockout the Red Wings were usually in possession of a significant portion of the most skilled players in the NHL.

On the eve of the 2004-2005 lockout the Red Wings payroll was sitting at around $77.8 million with Niklas Lidstrom making approximately $10 million a season. By contrast the Flames payroll for the same year was $36.4 million with Jarome Iginla collecting $7.5 million of that money, while the Oilers’ payroll was $33.3 million and Tommy Salo was taking home the largest share at $3.9 million. Ilitch’s ownership should not be overlooked when evaluating the hegemony the Red Wings enjoyed in the NHL prior to the salary-cap era.

The Detroit Mystique

The Red Wings have been a dominant team, a respected team, for a long time now. Since the 1991-1992 season the Red Wings have been considered a strong challenger, if not a favourite, to win the Stanley Cup nearly every single season. They have made the post-season for 21 straight years, won their division 14 times since 1990-1991 and have won the President’s Trophy six times since its inception in the 1985-1986 season. They have won four Stanley Cups since 1996-1997 and were the last team to win back-to-back championships (at least until the Oilers win four in a row from 2016-2020 *crosses fingers and knocks on wood*).

They are often held up as the model of a successful NHL franchise that all other organizations attempt to mimic, much like the NFL’s New England Patriots or the NBA’s Boston Celtics and L.A. Lakers. Management members have an almost magical quality in the minds of the fans and media in other cities: “He must be a smart hockey guy. He spent years working with Holland and Nill in Detroit”.

The drafting and development system that the Red Wings have put into place, as well as their ability to land free agents (until recently) has been the envy of many GMs, especially those in smaller markets.

Maybe it’s just my contrarian nature, but when I hear about Detroit’s drafting prowess, I’m inclined to dig a little deeper to see if it really is true.

In 1996 they drafted nine players. Jesse Wallin, taken 26th overall was the only one selected to ever play in the NHL – 49 games, 2 assists, and 34 penalty minutes. The following year they drafted eight players and not one of them played 100 NHL games. Yuri Butsayev had the best career with 14 points over 99 games. In 1998 they drafted ten players, two of whom would become NHL players, Jiri Fischer and Datsyuk. Not bad work there, but of the other eight only one managed to play even 2 NHL games. Zetterberg keeps the 1999 draft from being a complete bust for the team. 2001 was a waste of time for Detroit at the draft table with seven picks and only two players even making the NHL, neither one managing more than 71 games.

More recent drafts cannot be determined yet as the Red Wings are notorious for letting their prospects ripen on the vine, so to speak. They are only now beginning to rotate in players that were drafted sometimes as many as six or seven years ago. Brendan Smith, their blue-chip defensive prospect who is likely to become an NHL regular this season was drafted in 2007 and has played some of the fewest games in the NHL in his first-round draft class (outside of draft busts like Angelo Esposito and Thomas Hickey, of course).

Whereas the usual sentiment is that a draft cannot be declared in terms of winners and losers until at least five years out, for the Red Wings one usually has to wait anywhere between five and ten years before knowing if their scouts saw something special or missed completely. This is because the organization likes to give prospects extended periods of apprenticeship and maturation. Their strong core roster allows them this luxury, but it is also an example of an organization that values patience and a long-term view to developing players.

That being said, when the Red Wings get it right, they knock the cover off the ball. Without a doubt, the Red Wings’ drafting has been the envy of the league, but there appears to be a fair degree of luck in their history as well. I remember Ken Holland saying something to the effect that if he and his management group were so smart, why did they wait until the 6th round to take Datsyuk? The Red Wings know that they have a good scouting group in Hakan Andersson, Mark Howe and Joe McDonnell and their other birddogs. But they also seem to realize that sometimes you have to be lucky to be good.

Andersson has become something of a mythical figure in draft junkie circles. He was hired as a professional European scout in 1990 from his previous career as a fishing guide. Maybe there’s some skill carry-over there. The analogy certainly translates well to the hockey world.

Looking over the draft record of the Red Wings since Andersson came on board (see what I did there? Fishing guide? On boar-oh never mind) there are some interesting things that I think tend to get overlooked in the Red Wings’ history.

Based on what I could find, Andersson’s first draft pick was a 10th round, 257th overall player named Tomas Holmstrom. Over the course of the following years Andersson was given more and more autonomy in making decisions and recommendations on overseas prospects. Today, as mentioned above, he is the head of their European scouting department.

To get a better handle on the Red Wings’ overall overseas drafting record I decided to take a closer look at their selections.

Thirty-four players, compared to seventeen who were drafted from the same leagues over the same time and who played at least one NHL game. That gives the Red Wings scouting department a success percentage of 33.3%. That drops to thirteen players if we limit it to those who managed more than 100 NHL games, a percentage of 25.4%, still far and away more successful over such a long time than many full NHL scouting teams. When one considers that many of those failed picks were prior to Andersson’s having taken over the team’s overseas scouting it only serves to enhance his reputation.

Andersson’s full story with respect to scouting is here; suffice to say that luck, an open mind, and awareness of the game have all impacted his recommendations and suggestions. The percentages, and history, would suggest that he is perhaps the most coveted asset in NHL talent identification and acquisition.

In short, the Red Wings deserve to a certain degree their vaunted status as excellent identifiers of NHL talent, but also should be recognized for being patient developers of that talent.

Jarkrok, Jurco and Pulkkinen

Given that this article is about the potential future of the Red Wings, I decided to take a closer look at a handful of their highly-rated prospects that are likely to impact the future of the team.

To begin, Calle Jarnkrok – playing for Brynas in the Elitserien, he averaged .58 ppg over 139 games and four seasons. Prior to that, in SuperElit, he averaged .92 ppg in 62 games over three seasons. His awards include the Elitserien title for most goals and most points by a junior in 2010-2011 (11 goals, 27 points). He managed a 1.5 ppg pace in the World Juniors of that same year. Jarnkrok is, by all accounts, a very good center prospect and a balanced, puck possession player in the Detroit mould. His projection is as a first-line center.

Tomas Jurco – Jurco is best-known for his time in the QMJHL playing for the St. John’s Sea Dogs. However, he has been successful in nearly every league he has ever played in. Throughout his career he has averaged at or above a ppg pace through his time in the QMJHL (172 gp, 1.02ppg, 87 goals, 88 assists), the Memorial Cup run from last year (8 gp, 6 goals, 2 assists, 1.0 ppg), as well as his games played for HC Kosice in Slovakia with both their U18 (62 gp, 1.05 ppg) and U20 (48 gp, 1.02 ppg) teams. He is productive at virtually every level. His game is also built around puck possession and a phenomenally high skill-level, again in the Detroit fashion. His projection is as a high-end second-line winger or potentially a solid first-line winger.

Finally, Teemu Pulkinnen – playing in the Jokerit system in Finland from the U16 team all the way to the men’s team this season, Pulkkinen has dominated at the lower levels and gradually outgrown every level that he has played at. His early totals are gaudy, posting at around 4.0 ppg with the U16 team, and then moving on the U17 team and scoring at a 3.0 ppg pace and a 1.89 ppg pace, on different squads. At the international junior level Pulkkinen has dominated as well, walking away from 72 games with a 1.6 ppg average. Through 13 games with the U20 team at the World Junior Championships Pulkkinen has a 1.46 ppg pace with 9 goals and 10 assists. He is a sturdily-built, shorter winger with noted finishing skills, but who has displayed a healthy balance between goals and assists, demonstrating good playmaking and awareness. His projection is as an accurate, scoring second-line winger.

I could go on, but after a point the prospect pages begin to look the same. In hindsight it is easy to see why a team would draft any of these players, just as it seems obvious to ask how any of them were still available as late as the 4th round of the draft. Whatever Detroit has done right at the draft, it would appear they are continuing to do so today.

Looking at their roster today the Red Wings would appear to lack some of the firepower they once boasted. To the casual observer it would appear as though the proverbial treads are beginning to wear a little thin, thus the many voices declaring that the Red Wings may finally be descending from their dominating perch overtop the rest of the NHL.

A look at their organizational depth chart, however, still gives the impression of a strong team with a wide array of talents to deploy.

Detroit currently has Pavel Datsyuk, Henrik Zetterbeg, Darren Helm and Justin Abdelkader at center, perhaps the weakest is has been in a decade. Valterri Filppula, Daniel Cleary, Gustav Nyqvist, Drew Miller and Jan Mursak are on the left wing, followed by Johan Franzen, Mikael Samuelsson, Todd Bertuzzi, Jordan Tootoo, Patrick Eaves and Damian Brunner on the right wing. Their top-six players are strong enough to break even or beat the opposition’s best players in a head-to-head matchup and can often dictate the pace of the game against all but the most effective shutdown players.

One of the strengths of the Red Wings over the years has been their ability to recover from the loss of effective support players. Holland and his staff, including Jim Nill, were also fortunate to work within an organization with strong financial backing prior to the salary-cap, when money could remedy a great host of mistakes and shortcomings. This allowed the Red Wings to construct a strong core through free agency, drafting, and deft trades. That core has evolved over the years from the Russian Five that helped win the cup in 1996 and 1997, to the leadership group that won under Yzerman, and then on to Lidstrom and the 2008 cup-winning team. It now falls on the shoulders of Datsyuk and Zetterberg. The advantage for them is that neither is new to the role of leadership or being an integral part of the team. Both are seasoned veterans at the peak of their careers and who can shelter the next generation of Red Wings’ prospects, likely without sacrificing a great deal of their offense, as we have seen with the Ducks’ top line.

Perhaps the key element to the Red Wings’ development success is time. The Red Wings are patient almost to a fault. Consider that Jakub Kindl played his first full season just this past year and yet he was drafted in the first round (19th overall) back in 2005. How many organizations have that kind of patience with their prospects? Indeed, how many prospects have that kind of patience with their organizations?

Twice before the Red Wings’ critics have tried to write them off as being over the hill. And twice now they have succeeded in recovering from significant roster attrition through free agency and by drafting and developing replacement players; players whose skills are exemplary, and who were given adequate time to mature before being put into a system and environment where success is the norm, rather than an abstract goal. Is the third time the charm?

The Red Wings’ roster is currently positioned such that, of their many highly-ranked prospects, they need promote only one or two per season to make up for retirements and contract expirations. Allowing for this gradual replacement at various positions has leant them tremendous sustainability and continuity.

To give you an idea of the depth of some of Detroit’s talent, their fourth-ranked right-wing prospect, depending on the ranking scale, is considered to have an equal or higher ceiling than any prospect in the Philadelphia Flyers entire farm system. To be fair, the right wing is Detroit’s deepest area in prospect depth, however, they have promising prospects at center (Riley Sheahan, Calle Jarnkrok), left wing (Tomas Tatar), defense (Brendan Smith and Ryan Sproul) and goal (Petr Mrazek) as well.

As frustrating as this can be for fans of other teams, it would appear that Detroit is likely to continue its trend of seemingly “lucky” draft picks, and when coupled with patience towards development, the future would appear to be promising for this organization.

Conclusions

How do things look in Detroit now that Lidstrom is gone, with Holmstrom likely to follow, and Datsyuk and Zetterberg both in the prime of their careers? Pretty darn good, from the sounds of it. In fact, reading through their prospect list it is possible to imagine Detroit being better from 2015 to 2020 than they have been and are likely to be from 2009 to 2014.

Reading through their prospects’ talent analyses there is a recurring message in many of the briefs: "finds a way to hold on to the puck". In other words, these players are skilled, perhaps a little raw, and many of them bear the hallmark of what has become "Red Wing Hockey" since the days of the famous Russian Five: puck possession.

Corey Pronman at Hockey Prosepectus has them ranked 3rd overall for prospect depth. Of the top ten teams (Florida, NYI, Detroit, Minnesota, Ottawa, Chicago, Tampa Bay, Anaheim, Edmonton and Montreal) they are the only team of that group that has neither engaged in a rebuilding effort nor suffered a collapse in the standings in any recent season. Yet, they have managed to add or complement their core with talented players, even acquiring young defenders such as Kyle Quincey, all while drafting and developing what would appear to be a solid portion of the future of the organization.

Might the Red Wings suffer a setback and come crashing back to earth in the standings? To some extent they have already. Going from 115 points in 2008 when they won the Stanley Cup, to 112, the following season, then 102, 104 and 102 these past three seasons. Depending on what happens in the 2012-2013 season, they may yet have a season similar to their past three. However, based on their current talent and the prospects available for promotion, they are unlikely to remain there. The Red Wings have also been vulnerable in the post season, losing out to teams such as San Jose and Nashville and ultimately it is success in the playoffs that determines the legacy of a team.

The crucial factor for the Red Wings might not be the replacement of Niklas Lidstrom, but rather the reinforcement of Pavel Datsyuk. The Red Wings are going to need another playmaking center as Datsyuk enters the latter half of his career, and he and Zetterberg are the principal offensive players for the team. The defense may operate by committee, but history has shown that the same approach for offense is rarely successful.

What is intriguing is that there is every chance that this is as bad as it will get for this team.

Again, Why Should I Care?

It doesn’t matter if you are a Flames or an Oilers fan. Or a Canucks fan for that matter. The fact is that if your team plays in the West, then it would seem that the Red Wings will continue to dominate the conference for the foreseeable future and that any chance that any of those teams has in getting to the Stanley Cup final may well go through the Joe Louis Arena.

For Oilers fans there may be particular areas of interest, specifically in the nature of the management paradigm and the role of advisors and scouts in the organization. The Oilers have openly declared that they wish to emulate a great deal of the Red Wings’ style of franchise operation. Understanding what that is may help in evaluating the moves of the Oilers organization and determining if they are moving closer to this goal. Certainly the gradual accumulation of members to the management collective, most recently Craig MacTavish, and the rumoured increased role of Stu MacGregor in hockey operations would seem to suggest those steps are being taken.

For Flames fans the Red Wings offer the tantalizing alternative of a successful team built not through disastrous seasons and lottery selections, but through shrewd drafting and observant scouting. Replicating that success is another matter, though, as there are 29 other teams that would dearly love to be the Detroit Red Wings.

As fans we usually see the Red Wings as a sort of unchanging entity. They are one of the best in the league and often we judge the progress of our team by how they fare against them. The lockout gives us an opportunity to step back and assess the strengths and weaknesses of several teams outside of the hyperbole and expectations that we generate from our own misconceptions. The Red Wings have been and are continuing to change as a team since the early 90s. While they play a similar puck-possession style now as they did then, they have evolved and would appear to be on the cusp of doing so again.

One of the best articles I’ve ever read at ON. Well done, usually with the longer articles I get bored and end up skimming then skipping through most the content but with this I was compelled to keep reading and enjoyed it in its entirety. Great job!

Are you planning to write an Oilers based article similar to this one?

I cant imagine the flames or their fan base having the tools or the patience to pull off a wings style rebuild. They just don’t have the horses and the one they could have got something decent for has become a wasted opportunity for change in the interest of continuity……. or something.

Compounding that issue is a brain trust that by all appearances is brain dead.

However…. we are talking about the wings here. It is my own belief that Mike Babcocks “style of accountability” can become rather wearing on a team and organization. He is a stud coach… but his iron fist methodology has begun to carry a wee bit of a keenan, sutter, hitchcock, MacT type of taint. The horses dont seem to be responding as well to the whip… IMHO.

I do think the Wings are getting the benefit of the doubt in a lot of predictions, but if I look at their lineup I see them heading for a fall out of the playoffs;

-I think it is hard to quantify how much a team will miss a 25 min a game, best guy on the ice Dman like Lidstrom. I look at how far the Blues and the Oilers fell when Pronger left.

-I don’t like any of their moves this year (other than signing Gustavson). I don’t like the Quincey trade, and the Samuellson and Tootoo signings do not seem like moves an elite team would do.

-The fact that none of the top free agents went there, is to me, a sign that the players and agents see Detroit as a falling franchise.

-Their D actual looks worse than the Oilers D.

-I wonder if there will be long term problems with the Zetterberg, Kromwell and Franzen contracts as they get deep into their 30s (in fact that is one more thing that drives me crazy about this lockout, we haven’t seen the full impact of these long term contract on the teams that signed.a bunch of them).

That said, I am still impressed with how the Wings bring along their European talent. I do believe Lander and Paararvi would have been better off in the Detroit system. I would trade Tambo for Holland in a second and would rank Babcock as the coach I would most want behind the Oilers bench.

I agree. They’ve survived losing all the other guys, but they’ve always had Lidstrom to fall back on. Only time will tell, but I think he’s been the biggest part of the success of this franchise for the last twenty years (all due respect to Stevie).

When the Oilers lost Pronger, they also lost their UFAs and were left with Smyth, Horcoff, and Hemsky who are not Datsyuk and Zetterberg. The Redwings without Lidstrom are still a very talented team with quite possibly the best coach in the NHL (though Babcock’s contract expires at the end of this year).

I don’t see them as the contenders they once were. As you say their signings (I actually don’t mind the Tootoo signing as there is little to lose by it) are weak, and their UFA success has been limited of late. But, I don’t see them as falling out of the playoffs. Their defense prospects who will be filling in are exceptional, and well seasoned in the pros, while Edmonton’s good D-men are either injured or inexperienced, or won’t be in the NHL for at least another season.

@Steve, time will tell, but I do think that Lidstrom, particularly in the last few years, is overrated by many. I’ve heard people call him the 2nd best D-man of all time, but I’d question whether he’s even top 5. Lidstrom has relied on his smooth skating to cut off opposing forwards, and a clear system for outlet passes, but the last 3 years he’s slowed down and had trouble dictating play and so his impact for the Redwings has already been on the decline, yet the team is still among the best in the league.

I’d love to get into this (just to clarify, I think that he’s probably the best D-man in the last decade, just that he doesn’t rate ahead of someone like Coffey, Harvey, or even necessarily Parks), unfortunately I’m gone for a couple of weeks. Nail me on this next time I’m on the boards, I’d like to give this a proper breakdown, just ask me why Lidstrom isn’t top 5.

I will be the first to admit that Detroit is one of, if not THE best run team in the NHL. But, yes there is a but, they have benefited greatly from good old luck. When you are picking guys in the 5th and 7th round and end up with Datzyk and Zetterburg there is a equal portion of luck and scouts talent. Just remember that all 30 teams (Detroit included) passed on those 2 players 5 and 7 times each. If those scouts from Detroit really knew something that everyone else didn’t they would have grabbed them waaaay earlier in the draft and not left it till the last rounds.

They were both ‘draft and follow’ reach picks. Just like all the other 30 teams made. And the chances of players taken in those rounds becoming NHL players is less than 1%. I think some head scouts just go through a hot streak once and a while just like players on the ice. It sure seems like MPS has pulled a few late rouns steals too (Gernat, Davisdon, ect) I guess sometimes you have to be good to be lucky.

A couple of things. While it is an undeniable fact that the Wings had late round success, I always ask the following questions:

– If they knew Datsyuk would “be Datsyuk” or that Zetterberg would turn out to “be Zetterberg” why did they wait so long to draft them and risk losing them to a team who may also have been on the ball. Or, why did the head scout value Mike Sillinger and Bob Bouhgner more than Nick Lidstrom, in the same 1989 draft?

I am certainly not saying they are lucky – too many later round homeruns to say that and obviously there development model is solid. I am just saying they were rolling the dice a bit with these picks. There is no way they would have risked losing sure-fire 1st liners / Hall-of-Famers because they “might” be around a couple of rounds later.

I say the same thing about the Oilers and Messier. I mean if they knew what Messier would become, do you think they would have taken Kevin Lowe in the 1st round and hope Mark Messier would be available in the 3rd? No chance. Look at Shea Weber. “Shrewd 2nd round pick by Nashville” say the experts. And I would agree – except these same “geniuses” took Konstantin Galazachev (wtf is he???) and Kevin Klein 14 picks and 12 picks, respectively, earlier than Weber that very draft year.

Detroit is a model franchise – no question. But as you point out Rex they have had their share of busts. Scouting is not an exact science, obviously. The Wings have been fortunate in how these guys developed, but I would argue their development system is as much or more of the reason than their scouting staff.

Edit: BTW, the year that the Wings took Datsyuk, the following players were taken BEFORE Datsyuk by the Wings: Jiri Fischer, Ryan Barnes, Tomek Valtonen, Jake McCracken, Brent Hobday, Carl Steen, Adam DeLeeuw. Yikes!

Even Holland has admitted that luck played a big part in the drafting (read the story about the snow storm that may have prevented Datsyuk from being a St. Louis prospect on Hakan Anderssson’s wikipedia page).

Holland has also said that when things do get tough for Detroit nobody will have any sympathy.

By the same token,

*stupid power outage*

As I was saying, when the Oilers drafted Gernat they had him ranked within their top 35, yet waited until the 5th round. From what I can gather, the draft is treated like something of a poker game where you try to leverage every asset for all it is worth. The Oilers knew that Gernat was worth more than a 5th round pick, but gambled they could use one to get him, and in the meantime use their other earlier picks to acquire more assets along the way. I’m not saying that Detroit necessarily knew what Datsyuk was going to become, but Andersson might have ranked him in his top 20 players available in that year. Then knowing that he had almost been the only living person in the WEstern Hemisphere to have seen the kid play in person (and all reports are that Datsyuk had a terrible pre-draft interview – shy and poor body language) then he might have felt they could still get him late.

Who knows all the details, but Holland has admitted they got lucky a few times.

You can’t take the addition of one (or more) players in isolation without examining how the rest of the roster is affected.

A couple of examples:

The addition of Jeff Carter to the Kings was a HUGE addition above and beyond the skill he brought to the team’s second line. If you look at how the Kings, especially the first line, performed after the Carter acquisition, you will see how their scoring took off after Carter arrived because the opposition was forced to divide it’s attention and matchups.

Dustin Brown, for example scored 8G 15A 23P in the final 20 games of the season which would have pro-rated to 32G 60A 96P over a full season.

On the flip side, the declining play of Manny Malhotra forced Kesler to play in more defensive situations last season and his offensive production predictably dropped off. While he was also hampered by injury, his production decline was predictable.

In the case of the Wild, the additions of Granlund, Parise and Suter will have a similar effect, especially since no one was sent out to acquire any of these players.

Last season, with the injury to Koivu, Brodziak was effectively the Wild’s #1C. With the return of Koivu and the addition of Granlund, Brodziak is #3C and Torrey Mitchell and Zenon Knopka have been added with Matt Cullen and PM Bouchard available.

The addition of Parise has a similar effect at LW as Heatley, Latendresse and Kassian all are forced down the depth chart.

Suter has a similar effect on the D with every other defenseman moving back into a comfort zone.

When you consider that the Wild also have a whack of high end prospects banging on the door, and young defensemen improving rapidly, they’ll be a very, very good team.

If all the Wild had done is acquire Parise and Suter I would tend to agree with you to some degree but they made a couple of other strong moves in acquiring Konopka and Mitchell who are both a bitch to play against. Those guys will be sent out with Clutterbuk and Powe to make life miserable for their opponents.

I would agree. The West is going to be in tight. I think that the Eastern conference might be getting a little jealous of all the first overall picks playing out West. And by West, I mean in Edmonton.

Wouldn’t be a big surprise, even if it goes to a 30-team lottery, to see the 1st overall go to an Eastern time zone team. Not that I’m suspicious or anything.

I’m currently working on a little thought exercise as to how I would restructure (because they don’t like the word “Rebuild” in the 403) the team over a period of time.

Spoiler alert: it doesn’t involve Wideman.

The part that would be infuriating for me, were I a Flames fan (knock on wood), would be that the pieces and opportunity are all there, yet there is a stubborn refusal amongst ownership and management to recognize the reality of the situation and take fate up on her offer. Instead they keep dancing around, trying to accomplish the almost patently impossible and then wrapping it up in a big load of you-know-what to sell to their fans.

My fondest memories of the Motown Wings were of them in the 80s when the Gretzky led Oilers would whip them continuously like whipped butter. They did have a few good playoff series against us then. I remember Bob Probert was a force but it was so joyous how the Oilers beat up this team back then. Their GM at that time was Devellano and he was pretty pathetic back then. Their fortunes did start to turn after they drafted Yzerman and as money started to become a factor in NHL success. I will rejoice again when the Wings start their decline lead by the retirement of Lidstrom. The real hockeytown is the city of Edmonton and not the decaying car manufacturing metropolis of Detroit.

I can’t agree however. Part of the problem with retiring core players is that the core doesn’t get renewed. Harsh but true.

The great run they have had is based on four core players, two now gone and two I would say not in their prime but in decline, Datsyuk and Zetterberg, being in their thirties.

I am not sure they have the same level of talent in their system as the four, three being HOF calibre at least. Good but not great seems likely to me. The Canucks are in the same boat once the twins start fading, Kessler is already a mess and likely won’t return to what he was.

In a few years I expect LA, Colorado and the Oilers to have more talent than the Wings or Canucks.

Did you say end of days??Is that why this is happening ??Because the NHL knows the real truth??That there is a pole shift coming that will bring a displacement wave of saltwater over the continents of the planet??Do you think they are just letting everyone be with their families for those last moments??How romantic,thats better than the Titanic.Eveyone better start seeking high ground and begin digging j-shaped underground shelters that create air pockets to survive in eh??Ha ha ha ha.This made my day,the End of Days is to blame for the NHL lockout,HA HA HA!!

The Red Wings maintain system continuity and it pays off,they wont be falling as long as they stay that course.Instead of listing all the things that have changed why not list what hasnt??

Damn these articles are great. These are so much better than any 30 in 30, or any other analysis of what a team’s future will hold. Please keep these going.

As for the wings, all I can hope for is realignment. I think it would be great to see Detroit start to mix it up with New York, Pittsburgh, Philly, and Boston, adding in yet another team in the super Eastern rivalry meat grinder.

Plus that would mean another young Canadian team shift over to the west. Edmonton Winnipeg games would be so much fun to watch as more than a one off each season.

Even though I can’t stand some of the Flames, and Nucks fan tendencies, you can instantly feel a connection to people from those places through their NHL hockey franchise and ours, and people from Winnipeg would be no different.

Also, if your going to make predictions, please remember divisions. So for DSF, Minnesota can not be one if Vancouver is 3 and vice versa.

But since we’re all predicting:

1. St. Louise (challenged for the presidents trophy last year, are the same team this year but with Hitchcock for a full season)

2. L.A. (cause the stanley cup champs are also the same team but will enjoy a full season under Sutter)

3. Vancouver (They remain a dominant team in a weaker division)

4. Dallas (Take a look at their top two lines and the competition they’ll face in the Pacific)

5. Detroit (Cause as the above article demonstrates, they’re still Detroit. Just because they lost Lidstrom doesn’t mean they lost their system)

6. San Jose (Because they’re still San Jose. This team would be considered a dynasty if they didn’t tank so hard in the playoffs year after year)

7. Minnesota (like Dallas, their top 2 lines are tough to ignore, plus Backstrom is one of the NHL’s warriors)

8. Chicago (I see them eaking out Phoenix for the last playoff spot. Chicago is a good team with poor chemistry, that for some reason can’t seem to get it together)

9. Phoenix (sure they lost some points in Whitney, but like Detroit, you just can’t ever count Dave Tippet out. He’s made something with nothing for ever)

10. Edmonton (call it my rose coloured glasses prediction, but I think of all the question marks [will whitney be healthy, will Yak and Schutlz live up to or exceed expectations, can Dubnyk play like he did after the all-star break, will Smid and Petry continue to progress and develop, will Eberle repeat, will Hall finally break out, will the Nuge be even better] most of those answers will be yes, and that means meaningful games down the stretch)

11. Nashville (Nashville lost some defense, and they lost some firepower. I remember Edmonton running their show last year and exposing them for a team with a system that rides a goalie and relies too heavily on a top shut down pair. With less defense, and even less offense to replace it, I think they have a negative goals against this year)

12. Calgary (though there is a good argument to be made that Calgary will actually make the playoffs, I am predicting a Kipper injury, who was shown to be the backbone of this team down the stretch last year. No Kipper, no Calgary)

13. Colorado (such a wild card, but I think they need one more year to tweak a few things before finding success)

14. Anaheim (the lockout, as read by the last post, hurst this team maybe more than any, and that will show this year as their roster attrition since their cup win catches up with them)